释义 |
Examples:lots of different (skills)—fig. by the barrowload (i.e. lots and lots)—lit. ten thousand strings of cash in money belt (idiom); carrying lots of money—appear (of products, publications, sometimes derog., "lots of shoddy material is appearing nowadays")—lots of money, less work, and close home—form of writing novels that comprise lots of poetry in the body of the text, popular in the Ming Dynasty—classifier for batches, lots, military flights—inscribed bamboo stick (used in divination, gambling, drawing lots etc)—small capital, huge profit (idiom); put in a little and get a lot out—take a lot of trouble (over sb or sth)—lit. much thunder but little rain; fig. a lot of talk but little action—take a lot of trouble (idiom); painstaking—one's lot (of good and bad fortune)—be put to a lot of trouble—Trouble issues from the mouth (idiom). A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—a lot of water has flowed under the bridge since then—loud thunder, but only tiny drops of rain (idiom); a lot of talk, but no action—lit. punish a little to prevent a lot (idiom); to criticize former mistakes firmly to prevent large scale repetition—lit. eats a lot but never works (idiom); fig. a parasite—(used for abstract things) a good deal, a lot of—Illness enters by the mouth, trouble comes out by the mouth (idiom). A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—thousands of words (idiom); having a lot of things say—fig. A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—fig. wasting a lot of effort on trivialities—whether it's right or wrong doesn't make a lot of difference—complain of one's bitter lot—lit. When a lazy donkey is turning a grindstone, it takes a lot of time off for peeing and pooing—save a little only to lose a lot [idiom.]—boasts a lot, but nothing comes of it [idiom.]— |